Patrick Daugherty

Goal Line Stand

Week 16 Rankings

Updated 12/22/2013 at 12:00 PM ET. Maurice Jones-Drew added. Expecting a timeshare, with Jordan Todman being the slightly better play. Calvin Johnson moved down from No. 1 spot upon Adam Schefter's report that he's "not a sure thing to play."

It’s all led up to this. Every add, every drop. Every last-minute roster decision. Every garbage-time miracle. Every Harry Douglas. Every Nick Foles.

Rarely, if ever, is the path to championship week a straight line. A good draft will only get you so far. Say, Week 4. You don’t reach Week 16 without a little luck, and a whole lot of waiver-wire vigilance. That’s the nature of a game where 12 of the first 25 picks by ADP have missed at least one week.

It’s also why, even in Week 16, the best of the best fake footballers are mulling decisions that would have been unthinkable two weeks ago. Do I start Kirk Cousins? Who is Jordan Todman, where did he come from and how do I get him into my lineup? Can I trust undrafted rookie Dennis Johnson against the best team in the AFC? Is Matt freakin’ Flynn going to get a shot at his third straight comeback victory? So is the fantasy football life.

So how about the question of the week? No player is generating more championship-week discussion than Kirk Cousins, and rightfully so after he carved up the Falcons for 381 yards and three touchdowns in his first start of 2013. The question is not whether Cousins is daily-league gold (he is) or if he should be locked into two-quarterback league lineups (he should). It’s who can you trust him over in standard leagues? The answer? Probably not as many people as you’d think. For though Cousins’ upside is real — he’s facing a defense that’s allowed 81 more passing yards than any team in the NFL, and has been eviscerated up by career backups Flynn and Josh McCown the past two weeks — there’s no such thing as guaranteed upside for a player making his third-career start. Cousins isn’t quite a wing and a prayer, but he’s not the Rosetta Stone, either. Get excited, but don’t go crazy.

That means don’t start Cousins over season-long QB1s like Drew Brees and Cam Newton because they have “bad matchups,” however tempting it may be. Tom Brady or Andrew Luck? That’s at least a discussion. Luck is going on the road against one the league’s fiercest pass rushes, while Brady is without Rob Gronkowski and possibly Aaron Dobson and Kenbrell Thompkins against one of the few teams that’s historically had his number. But Luck is overseeing an offense that’s looked far more competent in recent weeks, and getting a defense that let Matt McGloin drop 297 yards on it in Week 15. Brady? Think about the actual act of benching Tom Brady for Kirk Cousins in Week 16. Clicking “bench” on one of the greatest players in league history during the fantasy finals to insert a second-year fourth rounder with 118 career pass attempts. Is it so crazy that it just might work? Ask Monte Kiffin. Is it still crazy? Yes.

Start Cousins over a struggling Matt Ryan in San Francisco or banged up Carson Palmer in the thunderdome. But when it comes to the Breeses of the world, you’re on your own. Maybe it will be in the winner’s circle. More likely it will be in the “what was I thinking” Hall-of-Fame.

Editor's Note: Rotoworld's partner FanDuel is hosting a one-week $300,000 Fantasy Football league for Week 16. It's $25 to join and first prize is $25,000. Starts Sunday at 1pm ET. Here's the FanDuel link.

Week 16 Quarterbacks

Rank

Player Name

Opponent

Notes

1

Peyton Manning

at HOU

Probable (ankle)

2

Nick Foles

vs. CHI

-

3

Drew Brees

at CAR

-

4

Matthew Stafford

vs. NYG

-

5

Cam Newton

vs. NO

-

6

Jay Cutler

at PHI

-

7

Philip Rivers

vs. OAK

-

8

Andy Dalton

vs. MIN

-

9

Tony Romo

at WAS

-

10

Colin Kaepernick

vs. ATL

-

11

Russell Wilson

vs. ARZ

-

12

Tom Brady

at BAL

Probable (shoulder)

13

Andrew Luck

at KC

-

14

Alex Smith

vs. IND

-

15

Ben Roethlisberger

at GB

-

16

Kirk Cousins

vs. DAL

-

17

Ryan Tannehill

at BUF

-

18

Ryan Fitzpatrick

at JAC

-

19

Jason Campbell

at NYJ

-

20

Joe Flacco

vs. NE

Questionable (knee)

21

Matt Ryan

at SF

-

22

Matt Cassel

at CIN

-

23

Carson Palmer

at SEA

Probable (ankle)

24

Matt Schaub

vs. DEN

-

25

Matt Flynn

vs. PIT

-

26

Eli Manning

at DET

-

27

Matt McGloin

at SD

-

28

Thad Lewis

vs. MIA

-

29

Mike Glennon

at STL

-

30

Chad Henne

vs. TEN

-

31

Kellen Clemens

vs. TB

-

32

Geno Smith

vs. CLE

-

33

Terrelle Pryor

at SD

-

QB Notes: A first-world problem? Wondering if the Broncos get up so big, so fast on the Texans that Peyton Manning is limited to essentially one half of football in fantasy championship week. It’s a valid concern, but a little less so after the Texans announced Matt Schaub will be making the start in place of Case Keenum. Not that Schaub is a world-beater, but his train is at least still on the tracks. That’s more than can be said for Keenum in recent weeks. Manning has 54.8 more fantasy points than his next closest competitor, Drew Brees. That’s a horse you see through till the end. … Nick Foles finally had a game where everything didn’t go right. The result? A season-high 428 yards, three touchdowns and 41 yards rushing for good measure. Yes, Foles threw two picks, but this is a player who’s matchup proof heading into Week 16. The Bears are much stouter against the pass than the run, but that shouldn’t matter in what will likely be another shootout.

With the Packers showing remarkable restraint in the face of a possible playoff berth, Aaron Rodgers (collarbone) appears no better than 50-50 to return for Sunday’s game against the Steelers. If he does, “rust” will not be a valid excuse to leave him on your bench. If Rodgers takes the field, there’s not a single fantasy pine he should be riding. … You know the Drew Brees score by now, but to recap, here are his numbers through seven home games: 350.6 yards per game, 73.2 completion percentage, 8.76 yards per attempt, 23:3 TD:INT ratio and a 122.5 quarterback rating. Through seven road: 292.3 yards per game, 63.4 completion percentage, 6.94 yards per attempt, 11:7 TD:INT ratio and 86.4 QB rating. Yes, that’s a major dropoff. But notice something about his road numbers? They’re still quite good, and likely better than the overall numbers of anyone you’d consider starting in his place. Carolina’s defense is not a good matchup for Drew Brees. You know who’s not a good matchup for Carolina’s defense? Drew Brees. Start the man.

Despite the idiocy of some, Matthew Stafford is not the problem in Detroit, and he’s not the problem for your fantasy team, particularly at home. That’s where he’ll face the noncompetitive Giants this weekend. Stafford is not going to turn in back-to-back bad starts at Ford Field. Benching him is a game you will lose. … Philip Rivers is the No. 5 fantasy quarterback with two weeks to go. Last season he finished 20th. Even with the Bolts running the ball well of late, Rivers should have a nice day against the Raiders’ patchwork secondary. … It was looking like “Jaypocalypse Now” early in Chicago’s Week 15 win over the Browns, but Jay Cutler bounced back to finish with three scores and 265 yards. In the past four games he’s played from start to finish, Cutler has averaged 25.7 fantasy points. That would rank third on the year. He’s going to get his against an Eagles defense allowing the fifth most fantasy points to quarterbacks. … Can Tony Romo bounce-back mentally from the latest Desolation of Dallas? It’s a valid question, but he has the right matchup in one of the few defenses that’s almost as bad as Monte Kiffin’s. Emphasis on almost.

Andy Dalton has been one of the least consistent players in football, but a much better player at home, he’s getting a team whose middle name might as well be “shootout.” Even if it’s begrudgingly, you need to trust Dalton for Week 16. … The last time Colin Kaepernick had a matchup this good, he was probably still at Nevada. Actually, it was Week 12 against the Redskins, where he racked up 25.8 fantasy points. Kaep is good to go for the ‘ship. … Oddly, Ben Roethlisberger finds his status tied to Aaron Rodgers’. If Rodgers plays, fire Big Ben up in a likely shootout. If he doesn’t, expect some ground-and-pound from Pittsburgh, and one of Roethlisberger’s every-other-week 220-yard efforts. … We talked about Andrew Luck in the lede, but the short of it? The matchup isn’t as dire as it appears on paper. Kansas City has sprung some leaks, while the Colts have found some competency and consistency. A big-play threat who tacks on yards with his legs, Luck is a high-upside play despite his up-and-down year. … Russell Wilson’s floor remains one of the highest in fantasy, but his ceiling is much lower than usual in a game that has all the makings of a brawl.

Alex Smith is fantasy’s No. 5 quarterback over the past five weeks. One spot behind him? Ryan Tannehill. The matchup isn’t amazing in a Bills defense that’s third in interceptions and leading the league in sacks, but Tannehill should pop enough big plays against Buffalo’s burnable secondary to make it worth fantasy owners’ while. … No. 19 is probably too low for the Amish Rifle, Ryan Fitzpatrick, but so is life when all 32 teams are playing. Fitzpatrick is an excellent daily-league option against a Jaguars team allowing the third most fantasy points to quarterbacks. … What Jason Campbell lacks in consistency, he makes up for it with Josh Gordon. The Browns are going to burn the Jets’ disintegrating secondary at least 2-3 times. … One of fantasy’s biggest disappointments this season, Matt Ryan is making a 2,500-mile trip to take on a top-five defense. If Ryan couldn’t shred the Redskins, he’s not going to have much luck against the 49ers. … Carson Palmer has been on a hot streak since a disastrous Week 7. Who shut him down that day? Seattle, whom he’ll now be facing in the toughest venue in sports. It’s been a nice ride, but it’s almost certainly over.

Updated 12/22/2013 at 12:00 PM ET. Maurice Jones-Drew added. Expecting a timeshare, with Jordan Todman being the slightly better play. Calvin Johnson moved down from No. 1 spot upon Adam Schefter's report that he's "not a sure thing to play."

It’s all led up to this. Every add, every drop. Every last-minute roster decision. Every garbage-time miracle. Every Harry Douglas. Every Nick Foles.

Rarely, if ever, is the path to championship week a straight line. A good draft will only get you so far. Say, Week 4. You don’t reach Week 16 without a little luck, and a whole lot of waiver-wire vigilance. That’s the nature of a game where 12 of the first 25 picks by ADP have missed at least one week.

It’s also why, even in Week 16, the best of the best fake footballers are mulling decisions that would have been unthinkable two weeks ago. Do I start Kirk Cousins? Who is Jordan Todman, where did he come from and how do I get him into my lineup? Can I trust undrafted rookie Dennis Johnson against the best team in the AFC? Is Matt freakin’ Flynn going to get a shot at his third straight comeback victory? So is the fantasy football life.

So how about the question of the week? No player is generating more championship-week discussion than Kirk Cousins, and rightfully so after he carved up the Falcons for 381 yards and three touchdowns in his first start of 2013. The question is not whether Cousins is daily-league gold (he is) or if he should be locked into two-quarterback league lineups (he should). It’s who can you trust him over in standard leagues? The answer? Probably not as many people as you’d think. For though Cousins’ upside is real — he’s facing a defense that’s allowed 81 more passing yards than any team in the NFL, and has been eviscerated up by career backups Flynn and Josh McCown the past two weeks — there’s no such thing as guaranteed upside for a player making his third-career start. Cousins isn’t quite a wing and a prayer, but he’s not the Rosetta Stone, either. Get excited, but don’t go crazy.

That means don’t start Cousins over season-long QB1s like Drew Brees and Cam Newton because they have “bad matchups,” however tempting it may be. Tom Brady or Andrew Luck? That’s at least a discussion. Luck is going on the road against one the league’s fiercest pass rushes, while Brady is without Rob Gronkowski and possibly Aaron Dobson and Kenbrell Thompkins against one of the few teams that’s historically had his number. But Luck is overseeing an offense that’s looked far more competent in recent weeks, and getting a defense that let Matt McGloin drop 297 yards on it in Week 15. Brady? Think about the actual act of benching Tom Brady for Kirk Cousins in Week 16. Clicking “bench” on one of the greatest players in league history during the fantasy finals to insert a second-year fourth rounder with 118 career pass attempts. Is it so crazy that it just might work? Ask Monte Kiffin. Is it still crazy? Yes.

Start Cousins over a struggling Matt Ryan in San Francisco or banged up Carson Palmer in the thunderdome. But when it comes to the Breeses of the world, you’re on your own. Maybe it will be in the winner’s circle. More likely it will be in the “what was I thinking” Hall-of-Fame.

Editor's Note: Rotoworld's partner FanDuel is hosting a one-week $300,000 Fantasy Football league for Week 16. It's $25 to join and first prize is $25,000. Starts Sunday at 1pm ET. Here's the FanDuel link.

Week 16 Quarterbacks

Rank

Player Name

Opponent

Notes

1

Peyton Manning

at HOU

Probable (ankle)

2

Nick Foles

vs. CHI

-

3

Drew Brees

at CAR

-

4

Matthew Stafford

vs. NYG

-

5

Cam Newton

vs. NO

-

6

Jay Cutler

at PHI

-

7

Philip Rivers

vs. OAK

-

8

Andy Dalton

vs. MIN

-

9

Tony Romo

at WAS

-

10

Colin Kaepernick

vs. ATL

-

11

Russell Wilson

vs. ARZ

-

12

Tom Brady

at BAL

Probable (shoulder)

13

Andrew Luck

at KC

-

14

Alex Smith

vs. IND

-

15

Ben Roethlisberger

at GB

-

16

Kirk Cousins

vs. DAL

-

17

Ryan Tannehill

at BUF

-

18

Ryan Fitzpatrick

at JAC

-

19

Jason Campbell

at NYJ

-

20

Joe Flacco

vs. NE

Questionable (knee)

21

Matt Ryan

at SF

-

22

Matt Cassel

at CIN

-

23

Carson Palmer

at SEA

Probable (ankle)

24

Matt Schaub

vs. DEN

-

25

Matt Flynn

vs. PIT

-

26

Eli Manning

at DET

-

27

Matt McGloin

at SD

-

28

Thad Lewis

vs. MIA

-

29

Mike Glennon

at STL

-

30

Chad Henne

vs. TEN

-

31

Kellen Clemens

vs. TB

-

32

Geno Smith

vs. CLE

-

33

Terrelle Pryor

at SD

-

QB Notes: A first-world problem? Wondering if the Broncos get up so big, so fast on the Texans that Peyton Manning is limited to essentially one half of football in fantasy championship week. It’s a valid concern, but a little less so after the Texans announced Matt Schaub will be making the start in place of Case Keenum. Not that Schaub is a world-beater, but his train is at least still on the tracks. That’s more than can be said for Keenum in recent weeks. Manning has 54.8 more fantasy points than his next closest competitor, Drew Brees. That’s a horse you see through till the end. … Nick Foles finally had a game where everything didn’t go right. The result? A season-high 428 yards, three touchdowns and 41 yards rushing for good measure. Yes, Foles threw two picks, but this is a player who’s matchup proof heading into Week 16. The Bears are much stouter against the pass than the run, but that shouldn’t matter in what will likely be another shootout.

With the Packers showing remarkable restraint in the face of a possible playoff berth, Aaron Rodgers (collarbone) appears no better than 50-50 to return for Sunday’s game against the Steelers. If he does, “rust” will not be a valid excuse to leave him on your bench. If Rodgers takes the field, there’s not a single fantasy pine he should be riding. … You know the Drew Brees score by now, but to recap, here are his numbers through seven home games: 350.6 yards per game, 73.2 completion percentage, 8.76 yards per attempt, 23:3 TD:INT ratio and a 122.5 quarterback rating. Through seven road: 292.3 yards per game, 63.4 completion percentage, 6.94 yards per attempt, 11:7 TD:INT ratio and 86.4 QB rating. Yes, that’s a major dropoff. But notice something about his road numbers? They’re still quite good, and likely better than the overall numbers of anyone you’d consider starting in his place. Carolina’s defense is not a good matchup for Drew Brees. You know who’s not a good matchup for Carolina’s defense? Drew Brees. Start the man.

Despite the idiocy of some, Matthew Stafford is not the problem in Detroit, and he’s not the problem for your fantasy team, particularly at home. That’s where he’ll face the noncompetitive Giants this weekend. Stafford is not going to turn in back-to-back bad starts at Ford Field. Benching him is a game you will lose. … Philip Rivers is the No. 5 fantasy quarterback with two weeks to go. Last season he finished 20th. Even with the Bolts running the ball well of late, Rivers should have a nice day against the Raiders’ patchwork secondary. … It was looking like “Jaypocalypse Now” early in Chicago’s Week 15 win over the Browns, but Jay Cutler bounced back to finish with three scores and 265 yards. In the past four games he’s played from start to finish, Cutler has averaged 25.7 fantasy points. That would rank third on the year. He’s going to get his against an Eagles defense allowing the fifth most fantasy points to quarterbacks. … Can Tony Romo bounce-back mentally from the latest Desolation of Dallas? It’s a valid question, but he has the right matchup in one of the few defenses that’s almost as bad as Monte Kiffin’s. Emphasis on almost.

Andy Dalton has been one of the least consistent players in football, but a much better player at home, he’s getting a team whose middle name might as well be “shootout.” Even if it’s begrudgingly, you need to trust Dalton for Week 16. … The last time Colin Kaepernick had a matchup this good, he was probably still at Nevada. Actually, it was Week 12 against the Redskins, where he racked up 25.8 fantasy points. Kaep is good to go for the ‘ship. … Oddly, Ben Roethlisberger finds his status tied to Aaron Rodgers’. If Rodgers plays, fire Big Ben up in a likely shootout. If he doesn’t, expect some ground-and-pound from Pittsburgh, and one of Roethlisberger’s every-other-week 220-yard efforts. … We talked about Andrew Luck in the lede, but the short of it? The matchup isn’t as dire as it appears on paper. Kansas City has sprung some leaks, while the Colts have found some competency and consistency. A big-play threat who tacks on yards with his legs, Luck is a high-upside play despite his up-and-down year. … Russell Wilson’s floor remains one of the highest in fantasy, but his ceiling is much lower than usual in a game that has all the makings of a brawl.

Alex Smith is fantasy’s No. 5 quarterback over the past five weeks. One spot behind him? Ryan Tannehill. The matchup isn’t amazing in a Bills defense that’s third in interceptions and leading the league in sacks, but Tannehill should pop enough big plays against Buffalo’s burnable secondary to make it worth fantasy owners’ while. … No. 19 is probably too low for the Amish Rifle, Ryan Fitzpatrick, but so is life when all 32 teams are playing. Fitzpatrick is an excellent daily-league option against a Jaguars team allowing the third most fantasy points to quarterbacks. … What Jason Campbell lacks in consistency, he makes up for it with Josh Gordon. The Browns are going to burn the Jets’ disintegrating secondary at least 2-3 times. … One of fantasy’s biggest disappointments this season, Matt Ryan is making a 2,500-mile trip to take on a top-five defense. If Ryan couldn’t shred the Redskins, he’s not going to have much luck against the 49ers. … Carson Palmer has been on a hot streak since a disastrous Week 7. Who shut him down that day? Seattle, whom he’ll now be facing in the toughest venue in sports. It’s been a nice ride, but it’s almost certainly over.

RB Notes:LeSean McCoy has 122 more rushing yards than anyone else. The Bears have allowed 279 more rushing yards than anyone else. Get excited. … Jamaal Charles has 58.6 more fantasy points than any other running back. … The matchup isn’t the greatest for Adrian Peterson, but here’s where we apply the Rodgers Logic: If Adrian Peterson plays for the Vikings, he plays for your fantasy team. The Vikes have insisted Peterson’s foot injury isn’t an issue, and he wouldn’t be playing if it was. … Riding a wave of strong matchups, DeMarco Murray has averaged 6.4 yards per carry over his past four games, bringing his season average to a crisp 5.5. Murray’s past 36 rushes have gone for 280 yards (7.7 YPC). The Redskins, who are allowing the third most fantasy points to running backs, aren’t going to slow him down. … Riding a wave similar to Murray’s, Matt Forte will be squaring off with an Eagles run defense that’s more formidable than it’s given credit for (3.8 yards per carry, 111 yards per game). That being said, owners should know by now that Forte’s all-purpose game is matchup proof. Only LeSean McCoy and Jamaal Charles have more yards from scrimmage, while Forte’s 66 catches are tied for second amongst running backs.

Eddie Lacy ate against the Cowboys’ inept run defense, but will find things tougher going against the Steelers if Aaron Rodgers isn’t there to invite soft fronts. Either way, Lacy’s monster workloads keep his floor high, and while the Steelers aren’t a doormat against the run, they aren’t exactly stout. Lacy is a legit RB1 for the fantasy finals. … Le’Veon Bell’s yards per carry (3.3) leaves much to be desired, but his usage does not. Bell has rushed the ball fewer than 15 times only once all season, and is averaging four catches. He’s a low-risk option that gives owners guaranteed points in an unpredictable game. … Averaging just 3.16 yards per carry over his past four games, Marshawn Lynch will do battle with a Cardinals defense with the second lowest YPC against (3.6). Lynch’s workload keeps him locked in as an RB1 in what will likely be a hard-fought game, but he should get a rest come Week 17. … Reggie Bush rushed 17 times for 86 yards and a touchdown in proving his calf was no longer an issue in Monday’s loss. He’s not even on the Week 16 injury report. Averaging 5.0 yards per carry and 137.6 yards from scrimmage at home, there’s no reason to worry about Bush for the fantasy finals.

Alfred Morris has proven to be a source of frustration for fantasy owners, but how do you bench a guy averaging 4.8 yards every time he rushes the ball against a defense serving up 4.9 yards per carry? You don’t. … This time last year, Ryan Mathews had crushed more dreams than William Shatner at a “Star Trek” convention. This season, he’s tied with LeSean McCoy and Adrian Peterson for the most 100-yard games (five), and is leading the league in rush attempts over the past five weeks (105). Old ghosts are hard to kill — and could always haunt again — but Mathews cannot be benched for the fantasy finals. … Rashad Jennings’ hostile takeover of the Raiders’ backfield has included five touchdowns in his past four games. He’ll be in position to score against a Chargers defense allowing 4.7 yards per carry. … Owners have to shake off Shane Vereen’s Week 15 dud. He means too much to the Patriots’ offense to post back-to-back clunkers. … Ray Rice is averaging 4.2 yards per carry and 87 yards from scrimmage over his past two games. That’s something, right? Right? … Rice should be good for at least FLEX production against a Pats defense allowing a weekly 147 yards from scrimmage to enemy running backs.

To trust Jordan Todman or not to trust Jordan Todman, that is the question. The answer is probably yes. Todman entered Week 15 with 193 yards from scrimmage. He exited it with more yards rushing (109) and YFS (153) than Maurice Jones-Drew had managed in a game all season. Guaranteed a huge workload for a team that has little interest in passing the ball, Todman should have success against a Titans club allowing the second most fantasy points to running backs. Todman is an ideal FLEX option who can produce like an RB2 if you enter the ‘ship low on runners. … Steven Jackson has five touchdowns over his past four games, but is still averaging just 3.5 yards per carry. He’s a tough sell against a 49ers defense that’s allowed only four rushing scores all year. … DeAngelo Williams had the best game by any Panthers runner this season in last week’s win, rushing 15 times for 81 yards while adding three grabs for an additional 87 yards and a touchdown. Now he gets a Saints defense allowing 4.6 yards per carry. Even with Mike Tolbert vulturing goal-line work, D-Will is a strong FLEX option.

Andre Brown got erased by the Seahawks last weekend, and things aren’t going to go much better against the Lions’ No. 4 run defense. Only Brown’s likely workload is keeping him on the RB2 fringe. … Want to walk on the wild side for the fantasy finals? Plug C.J. Spiller in against a Dolphins’ run defense allowing the 10th most points to rival runners. … Want to really walk on the wild side? Start Dennis Johnson in a game that could be a blowout. Be that as it may, the Broncos are allowing the ninth most fantasy points to running backs, while the Texans will likely keep feeding Johnson the rock even if things get out of hand early. Evaluation, not winning, is the priority in Houston for Weeks 16 and 17. … What’s the point in “trusting” Lamar Miller or Daniel Thomas. … Stevan Ridley: Still unlikely to be used near the goal-line. … Donald Brown is going to play through his stinger, but with 130 total yards over his past four games, he isn’t much of a FLEX option. … Willis McGahee will probably “start” for Cleveland, but look for him to split carries with Edwin Baker. Avoid.

Week 16 Receivers

Rank

Player Name

Opponent

Notes

1

Josh Gordon

at NYJ

-

2

A.J. Green

vs. MIN

-

3

Brandon Marshall

at PHI

Probable (quadriceps)

4

Demaryius Thomas

at HOU

Probable (shoulder)

5

Dez Bryant

at WAS

-

6

Alshon Jeffery

at PHI

-

7

Pierre Garcon

vs. DAL

-

8

Antonio Brown

at GB

-

9

Andre Johnson

vs. DEN

Probable (wrist)

10

Calvin Johnson

vs. NYG

Questionable (knee)

11

Keenan Allen

vs. OAK

Probable (shoulder)

12

Eric Decker

at HOU

Probable (ribs)

13

DeSean Jackson

vs. CHI

-

14

Julian Edelman

at BAL

-

15

Marques Colston

at CAR

-

16

Jordy Nelson

vs. PIT

-

17

Vincent Jackson

at STL

Probable (hamstring)

18

Torrey Smith

vs. NE

-

19

Mike Wallace

at BUF

-

20

T.Y. Hilton

at KC

-

21

Kendall Wright

at JAC

Probable (ankle)

22

Michael Crabtree

vs. ATL

Probable (ankle)

23

Larry Fitzgerald

at SEA

-

24

Brian Hartline

at BUF

-

25

Danny Amendola

at BAL

Probable (groin)

26

Greg Jennings

at CIN

-

27

Roddy White

at SF

-

28

Anquan Boldin

vs. ATL

-

29

Harry Douglas

at SF

-

30

Dwayne Bowe

vs. IND

-

31

Riley Cooper

vs. CHI

-

32

Steve Smith

vs. NO

Sidelined (knee)

33

Rueben Randle

at DET

-

34

James Jones

vs. PIT

-

35

Cordarrelle Patterson

at CIN

-

36

Michael Floyd

at SEA

Questionable (ankle)

37

Emmanuel Sanders

at GB

Probable (foot)

38

Doug Baldwin

vs. ARZ

-

39

Rod Streater

at SD

-

40

Hakeem Nicks

at DET

-

41

Golden Tate

vs. ARZ

Probable (hip)

42

Robert Woods

vs. MIA

-

43

Jarrett Boykin

vs. PIT

-

44

Da'Rick Rogers

at KC

-

45

Andre Holmes

at SD

-

46

Aaron Dobson

at BAL

Questionable (foot)

47

DeAndre Hopkins

vs. DEN

Probable (ankle)

48

Nate Burleson

vs. NYG

-

49

Marvin Jones

vs. MIN

-

50

Denarius Moore

at SD

-

51

Jerricho Cotchery

at GB

Probable (shoulder)

52

Eddie Royal

vs. OAK

-

53

Marlon Brown

vs. NE

-

54

Brandon LaFell

vs. NO

-

55

Jacoby Jones

vs. NE

-

56

Aldrick Robinson

vs. DAL

-

57

Santana Moss

vs. DAL

-

58

Justin Hunter

at JAC

-

59

Rishard Matthews

at BUF

-

60

Jeremy Kerley

vs. CLE

Probable (elbow)

61

Dexter McCluster

vs. IND

Probable (ankle)

62

Kris Durham

vs. NYG

-

63

Tiquan Underwood

at STL

-

64

Jermaine Kearse

vs. ARZ

-

65

Jerrel Jernigan

at DET

Questionable (knee)

66

Jerome Simpson

at CIN

-

67

Mike Brown

vs. TEN

-

68

Nate Washington

at JAC

-

69

Andre Caldwell

at HOU

-

70

Lance Moore

at CAR

-

71

LaVon Brazill

at KC

Probable (foot)

72

Ace Sanders

vs. TEN

-

73

Greg Little

at NYJ

-

74

Cole Beasley

at WAS

-

75

Mohamed Sanu

vs. MIN

-

76

Tavon Austin

vs. TB

Sidelined (ankle)

77

Santonio Holmes

vs. CLE

Probable (hamstring)

78

Vincent Brown

vs. OAK

-

79

Kenny Stills

at CAR

-

80

David Nelson

vs. CLE

-

81

Ted Ginn

vs. NO

-

82

Terrance Williams

at WAS

-

83

Donnie Avery

vs. IND

Probable (shoulder)

84

Miles Austin

at WAS

-

85

Jason Avant

vs. CHI

-

86

Stedman Bailey

vs. TB

-

87

Chris Givens

vs. TB

-

88

Marquise Goodwin

vs. MIA

Sidelined (knee)

89

Andre Roberts

at SEA

-

90

Griff Whalen

at KC

Questionable (calf)

91

Drew Davis

at SF

-

92

Chris Hogan

vs. MIA

-

WR Notes:Calvin Johnson has just one touchdown over his past four games. Expect him to get you one for the fantasy finals. … Josh Gordon has cleared 100 yards in six of his past nine games. According to Pro Football Focus’ ratings, no team has been worse than the Jets in pass coverage. The matchup couldn’t be better for fantasy’s most ascendant player. … Only the Eagles are allowing more fantasy points to receivers than Minnesota. Quiet for the better part of the past month, expect A.J. Green to erupt when it matters most. … Dez Bryant has had some good battles with DeAngelo Hall, but it’s not as if he’s gotten erased. Only six teams have allowed more aerial scores than the ‘Skins. Expect an angry Dez to flash some “positive exuberance” as he builds on last week’s 11/153/1 line. … Brandon Marshall and Alshon Jeffery are going to do bad things to an Eagles defense that’s surrendered the most fantasy points to enemy receivers. Cary Williams better have his fireman’s suit on.

Refreshed and restored with Kirk Cousins under center, Pierre Garcon stung a bad Falcons secondary for 7/129/1. Now he gets Dallas’ even worse unit. Only Demaryius Thomas and Josh Gordon have more yards after the catch than Garcon. Good luck to the second level of Monte Kiffin’s defense … The only two players with more receiving yards than Antonio Brown? Josh Gordon and Calvin Johnson. Don’t expect the fantasy finals to be the first week Brown is held below five catches. … Although he’s done his best work with Case Keenum under center, Andre Johnson’s Week 16 lot should be improved by Matt Schaub. … As is the case with all of Green Bay’s pass catchers, Jordy Nelson’s status is wholly dependent on Aaron Rodgers’ health. If Rodgers returns, Nelson is a WR1. If he doesn’t, low-end WR2. For James Jones it’s high-upside WR2 or high-risk WR3. Jarrett Boykin, high-upside WR3 or high-risk WR4. … Shake off Eric Decker’s slow Week 15. Decker isn’t going to have back-to-back down weeks with Wes Welker (concussion) on the shelf.

This isn’t the same Julian Edelman who set the fantasy football world aflutter in September. This Edelman is more than just a PPR-league dynamo. Fantasy’s No. 6 receiver over both the past three weeks and five, Edelman has eclipsed 100 yards in three of four games, posting four scores in the process. Tom Brady’s clear No. 1 option in the absence of Rob Gronkowski, Edelman is an eminently safe WR2. … DeSean Jackson seems to rotate weeks as a locked-in WR1 and low-end WR2. For Week 16, the matchup isn’t great in a Bears defense that’s far more stout against the pass than run. D-Jax belongs in all lineups, but can’t be counted on as the linchpin of your championship drive just seven days after dropping 10/195/1 on Minnesota. … Marques Colston has been a different player since sitting out in Week 9 with a knee injury, averaging 6.2 catches for 79 yards in six games. … Fantasy’s No. 14 receiver over the past five weeks, Mike Wallace is going to find the holes in a Buffalo defense that picks off passes and sacks the quarterback, but also gives up a lot of big plays to receivers. Only four teams have allowed more passing scores.

T.Y. Hilton hinted at a breakout in Week 15, catching six passes in the game’s first 17 minutes. He finished with just eight for 78 yards, however, after the Colts put the Texans out of their misery early. Hilton benefitted from both a renewed emphasis on getting him the ball, and Da’Rick Rogers occupying defensive attention. Hilton is a high-reward option for the fantasy finals. … Larry Fitzgerald (concussion) is tentatively expected to suit up for Week 16, but it will be in a brutal matchup with the league’s best secondary. Fitz caught just two passes for 17 yards when the sides squared off in Week 7, and that game was in Arizona. Fitz has been playing too well to be outright benched, but he’s a low-end WR2. … Seventh in the league in catches and 17th in receiving yards, shake off Kendall Wright’s lack of touchdowns and plug him in as a guy you know is going to get you points. … That was the Danny Amendola New England paid $28.5 million. Making tough catch after tough catch, Amendola finished last week’s loss with 10 grabs for a season-high 131 yards. He should continue to run as Tom Brady’s No. 2 receiver even if “X” man Aaron Dobson (foot) returns for Week 16. Dobson is practicing.

With the Falcons starting two rookie corners, Week 16 is the time to bust out Michael Crabtree if you’ve been stashing him since mid-season. … It’s been a quiet four weeks for Riley Cooper, but his big-play ability still makes him a high-reward WR3. … Steve Smith is basically just a body at this point in his career. He won’t really hurt you, but he’s not helping you, either. … Rueben Randle is a high-risk, high-reward gamble for the fantasy finals. Starting in place of an injured Victor Cruz (concussion, knee), Randle is getting an opportunity to flash his game-breaking skills against a secondary that can be broken. The problem is Eli Manning, but 3-4 catches could be all Randle needs to make himself a fantasy hero. … Michael Floyd has been a legitimate breakout player, but at less than 100 percent against Seattle’s Legion of Boom, he can’t be trusted for Week 16. … You’d be hard pressed to find a more exciting WR4 than Cordarrelle Patterson. … Da’Rick Rogers is a close second, especially if he gets a few targets against burnable Chiefs No. 2 CB Marcus Cooper. … Justin Hunter is too risky following his Week 15 deactivation. … Ace Sanders has tumbled down the depth chart.

Week 16 Tight Ends

Rank

Player Name

Opponent

Notes

1

Jimmy Graham

at CAR

-

2

Vernon Davis

vs. ATL

-

3

Julius Thomas

at HOU

Probable (knee)

4

Greg Olsen

vs. NO

Probable (foot)

5

Delanie Walker

at JAC

Probable (concussion)

6

Jason Witten

at WAS

-

7

Tony Gonzalez

at SF

Questionable (toe)

8

Dennis Pitta

vs. NE

-

9

Charles Clay

at BUF

-

10

Martellus Bennett

at PHI

-

11

Heath Miller

at GB

-

12

Antonio Gates

vs. OAK

Probable (hamstring)

13

Ryan Griffin

vs. DEN

-

14

Zach Miller

vs. ARZ

Probable (ribs)

15

Coby Fleener

at KC

-

16

Scott Chandler

vs. MIA

-

17

Tim Wright

at STL

-

18

Zach Ertz

vs. CHI

Probable (shoulder)

19

Brandon Myers

at DET

-

20

Andrew Quarless

vs. PIT

-

21

Joseph Fauria

vs. NYG

-

22

Marcedes Lewis

vs. TEN

Probable (thigh)

23

Logan Paulsen

vs. DAL

-

24

Jared Cook

vs. TB

-

25

Jermaine Gresham

vs. MIN

Probable (abdomen)

26

Tyler Eifert

vs. MIN

-

27

Mychal Rivera

at SD

-

28

Anthony Fasano

vs. IND

Probable (concussion)

29

Brent Celek

vs. CHI

Probable (hip)

30

Kellen Winslow

vs. CLE

Probable (knee)

31

Rob Housler

at SEA

Questionable (groin)

32

Jeff Cumberland

vs. CLE

-

33

Lance Kendricks

vs. TB

Probable (finger)

34

Luke Willson

vs. ARZ

-

35

Michael Hoomanawanui

at BAL

Probable (knee)

36

Ladarius Green

vs. OAK

-

37

MarQueis Gray

at NYJ

-

38

Rhett Ellison

at CIN

-

39

Ed Dickson

vs. NE

-

40

Clay Harbor

vs. TEN

-

41

Fred Davis

vs. DAL

-

42

Ben Watson

at CAR

-

43

Jim Dray

at SEA

-

44

Sean McGrath

vs. IND

-

45

Jacob Tamme

at HOU

-

46

Gary Barnidge

at NYJ

-

47

Chase Ford

at CIN

-

48

Dorin Dickerson

vs. NYG

-

49

Tony Moeaki

vs. MIA

-

TE Notes:Vernon Davis has scored in five straight games, and 10 of 13 on the season. Now there’s a TE1. Julius Thomas has almost been Davis’ equal, finding paydirt in 9 of 12 games. The difference is Thomas has 131 fewer yards on five more catches. Davis’ big-play ability is the kind rarely found at the tight end position. Davis’ 16.4 yards per catch is first amongst tight ends, and eighth in the league. … Greg Olsen’s 28 catches over the past five weeks are tied with Heath Miller for the most amongst tight ends. Playing his best football at the right time of year for both Carolina and fantasy owners, Olsen is an extremely safe option even in a fairly-forbidding matchup. … Facing a Cardinals team allowing the most fantasy points to tight ends, Delanie Walker took advantage of a cakewalk matchup in Week 15, stinging Arizona for 8/53/1. His reward? A matchup with the second worst defense against tight ends, Jacksonville. Walker can’t be benched for the fantasy finals.

Jordan Cameron is extremely dicey for Week 16 after coming down with concussion symptoms on Monday. Although the odds that he suits up are probably less than 50-50, he’ll be a must start if he goes. Only seven teams are allowing more fantasy points to rival tight ends than the Jets. … The 49ers defend everything well, including tight ends. Tony Gonzalez is always a good bet to find the end zone, but don’t expect him to match the 8/78/1 he dropped on San Francisco in last season’s NFC Championship Game. … Dennis Pitta was one of Week 15’s major disappointments, but owners have to shake it off against a Patriots team with linebackers that can’t cover anybody. Only four teams have allowed more catches to tight ends than New England. Baltimore needs Pitta as much as you do. He’s going to get the rock. … Charles Clay’s Week 15 dud wasn’t surprising — Miami’s game plans have never been known for their consistency — but it was spectacular. It was just the second time all season that Clay caught fewer than three passes. He should bounce back against Buffalo.

The Eagles are stout against tight ends, but Martellus Bennett is still a good bet to find the end zone. Bennett is a much bigger part of the Bears offense when Jay Cutler is under center. … With Garrett Graham (hamstring) “iffy” for Week 16, owners should be prepared to roll with Ryan Griffin, who essentially did the world’s greatest Garrett Graham impression in Week 15. … The Broncos are allowing the ninth most fantasy points to tight ends. … Coby Fleener is a no-go against a Chiefs defense allowing the fewest fantasy points to tight ends. … Zach Miller’s specialty is random touchdowns. A score wouldn’t be so random against Arizona’s infamous tight-end defense. … Scott Chandler is a low-upside, but safe, TE2 against a Dolphins defense that’s been getting burned by tight ends all season. … Tyler Eifert would be an intriguing play if Jermaine Gresham (hip) can’t go. For now, it appears he will, rendering both fantasy nonentities.